Dead body placed beside Australian couple on flight
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An Australian couple have spoken of the âtraumaticâ moment the body of a dead passenger was placed next to them on a Qatar Airways flight.
Mitchell Ring and Jennifer Colin, who were travelling to Venice for a dream holiday, told Australiaâs Channel 9 a woman died in the aisle beside them during the flight from Melbourne to Doha.
The couple say cabin crew sat her corpse, which was covered in blankets, next to Mr Ring for the remaining four hours of the flight and did not offer to move him, despite there being empty seats.
Qatar Airways said it apologised for âany inconvenience or distress this incident may have causedâ, adding that it was in the process of contacting passengers.
Mr Ring said staff responded âin no timeâ when the woman collapsed, but that âunfortunately the lady couldnât be saved, which was pretty heart-breaking to watch,â he told the A Current Affair programme.
Cabin crew tried and failed to move her body away towards business class, he explained.
âThey tried to wheel her up towards business class, but she was quite a large lady and they couldnât get her through the aisle.
âThey looked a bit frustrated, then they just looked at me and saw seats were available beside me â my wife was on the other side, we were in a row of four.
âThey said, âcan you move over please?â and I just said, âyes no problemâ.
âThen they placed the lady in the chair I was in.â
Ms Colin said she was shocked when her husband said they were being asked to move up: âI said, âare they going to put her there?'â
While Ms Colin was able to move to an empty seat nearby, Mr Ring said he was not given the option to do so by cabin crew â even though there were vacant seats.
When the plane landed four hours later, he said passengers were asked to stay put while medical staff and police came on board.
âAmbulance officers started pulling the blankets off the lady,â Mr Ring said.
âI got to see her face.
âI canât believe they told us to stay.â
The pair said they had not been contacted nor offered any support by Qatar Airways or Qantas, the airline through which they booked the flight.
âThey have a duty of care towards their customers as well as their staff,â Mr Ring said.
âWe should be contacted to make sure, do you need some support, do you need some counselling?
âI donât really know how I feel and would like to speak to somebody to make sure Iâm alright.â
Ms Colin called the experience âtraumaticâ and said: âWe totally understand that we canât hold the airline responsible for the poor ladyâs death, but there has to be a protocol to look after the customers on board.â
In a statement, Qatar Airways said: âFirst and foremost our thoughts are with the family of the passenger who sadly passed away on board our flight.
âWe apologise for any inconvenience or distress this incident may have caused, and are in the process of contacting passengers in line with our policies and procedures.â
A Qantas spokesperson said: âThe process for handling incidents onboard an aircraft like this is managed by the operating airline, which in this case is Qatar Airways.â